The map not only provides the location of forests and game lands, but details things like the location of oak forests, timber harvests, herbaceous openings and winter thermal cover, i.e. stands of pine. It also lists roads open seasonally to hunters.

There’s information on chronic wasting disease, too, as well as the location of bear check stations and forestry and commission offices. A measurement function, meanwhile, allows users to see how far, for example, it is to walk from one point to another. It’s also possible to plot GPS waypoints for marking stands or points of interest.

Hunters can even check antler point restrictions, hunting hours and seasons and bag limits by their location, too.

And it’s all customizable. Hunters can turn “layers” on the map on and off to get as much or as little of those details as they want.

“Everything is pretty much integrated across the two land bases. It’s pretty much seamless,” said Joe Petroski, chief of the geospatial applications section for Conservation and Natural Resources.

That wasn’t the case before.

The department and commission used to have separate hunting maps, said Mark Niessner, of the commission’s habitat planning and development division. They looked different from one another in several ways.

That, he said, was a problem.

“Not only were we putting time and effort into trying to maintain two different systems, and giving two different looks, we were confusing hunters,” Niessner said,

This new map is the solution.

Niessner said it’s more than a road map, but less than a field guide.

“It’s for finding a hunting spot,” he said.

It’s something hunters have been asking for, Petroski said. Their number one request in the past, he said, was for a map that included forests and game lands both.

“Really, the whole purpose for this map is because hunters are a very important resource to help control wildlife populations. And we want to be able to give them good tools to utilize this information and get them out there and work with them,” Petroski said.

“So we now have a map that’s a total of 3.7 million acres of public land. I think it’s probably one of the best sites of every state in the nation that’s out there as a hunter resource.”

It’s fully mobile compatible, too. Petroski said it may look a bit “squished” on a cell phone screen, but it “definitely still works.”

“You can certainly use it in your tree stand if you have cell coverage or a data plan,” he said.

And it may yet get better.

Each agency can, independently, add to the map as time goes on. In the commission’s case, for example, that will likely mean adding the location of pheasant stockings, managed dove fields, waterfowl hunting zones, the boundaries of special regulation areas and more.

“Those are the kinds of things we have plans for bringing in,” said Tom Makibbin, GIS administrator for the commission. “It’s just a matter of time and materials available to implement something like that.”

Meanwhile, other public lands – like Allegheny National Forest — are identified on the map, Petroski said. Details on things like which of its roads are open seasonally for hunters are not.

But that could change, he added, if other agencies decide to get involved.

Commission president Tim Layton said he’s excited about the Pennsylvania hunting map. It’s just the kind of thing that can really help hunters, he said.

“I don’t know about anyone else, but this is exactly what I was looking for,” Layton said. “It’s one-stop shopping for the hunter. It’s just perfect.”

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Bob Frye is a storyteller with a passion for all things outdoors. He hunts, he fishes, he hikes, he camps, he paddles, backpacks and snowshoes depending on the season. If he’s not an expert at anything, it’s because he’s passionate to try a little bit of everything.

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